Authors
S Ahmad Mokhtari, Mehdi Farzadkia, Ali Esrafili, Roshanak Rezaei Kalantari, Mitra Gholami
Publication date
2017/3/1
Journal
Desalin Water Treat
Volume
66
Issue
5
Pages
176-183
Description
Herein, two different extraction methods (Soxhlet and ultrasound assisted extraction) along with dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction (as an assisted clean-up and preconcentration technique) were applied for the measurement of selected polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in sewage sludge. The measurements were made using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The extraction efficiencies of the above-mentioned methods were investigated and subsequently compared. Briefly, high amounts of sludge were gently heat-dried and sieved and the resulting solids (5 g for the Soxhlet extraction and ultrasound assisted extraction each) were then subjected to the corresponding extraction method. To clean-up, after completion of the extraction phase, the extract was dried under a gentle stream of nitrogen and then diluted with acetone (1.5 ml) and finally passed through a PTFE syringe filter. Further on, tetrachloroethylene (C2Cl4, 12 µl) was added to the acetone solution and the resulting mixture was rapidly added to a vessel containing deionized water (5.0 ml) for assisting the clean-up process and further preconcentration. Afterwards, the sedimented organic phase (5±0.5 µl) was withdrawn and injected into the GC/MS (1.0 µl) for identification and quantification of the PAHs. Some differences between the two methods were observed for reproducibility and limits of quantification and were determined to be insignificant and significant, respectively. Overall, Soxhlet extraction had better extraction efficiency compared to that of the Ultrasound assisted extraction for the PAHs.
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